Wednesday, October 9, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Wednsda, Ocobe 9, 968THE ICHGAN AIL --7-T re CAMPAIGN ROUNDUP: " HHH proposes summ with Russia to promc WASHINGTON OP)-Hubert H., * Humphrey said yesterday the United States and the Soviet Union have "a special and par- allel responsibility" for world peace and he proposed that their leaders hold regular summit meet- ings each year. "If there are to be regular sum- o mits," the vice president said, "they must entail common work for peace," and "must not become mere vehicles for propaganda nor *springboards for illusion." "The nuclear age calls for new forms of diplomacy,"' said Hum- phery, "less of ritual, more con- ducive to frank, informal con- tacts. "I propose to make these in- formal meetings into forums for new diplomacy, free of the pub- licity, free of the high expecta- tions that surround irregular sum- mit meetings," he said. * Humphrey's proposal was con- tained in a broad review of U.S.- Soviet relations, presented to a United Press International editors and publishers conference. The vice president, calling on the Soviets to use their influence with North Vietnam "to start ne- 4 gotiating seriously" at Paris, set down six essential points for any Middle East settlement. He thus filled in another por- tion of the foreign policy he plans 'n a Humphrey - administration. Earlier, Humphrey has proposed strengthening United Nations peacekeeping machinery, urged prompt ratification of the nuclear nonproliferation treaty and the start of new disarmament talks and said he considers a bombing halt over North Vietnam as an acceptable risk for peace. George Wallace 'Third party PL Y leaders talk. By The Associated Press STRATFORD, Conn. - Third party presidential c a n d i d a t e George Wallace arrived for a quick campaign visit to Connecti- cut yesterday, seeking "the sup- port of people of all races and colors in this state." An enthusiastic crowd of about 2,000 greeted Wallace on his ar- rival at Bridgeport Municipal Air- port-where some 200 pickets also waited in the background. Wallace did not appear per-, turbed by the demonstrators and it meetmins te peace drew a laugh from the rest of the crowd when he said: "Must be a - barber strike around here." "If I'm elected they're not going to use tax money to bus your kids anywhere you don't want them to be bused," Wallace said. He said the U.S. Supreme Court "has made scond-class citizens out of the policeman and the fireman." In Los Angeles, Wallace's run- ning mate said yesterday he join- ed the presidential ticket because Republican 'Richard Njixon plans to pack his cabinet with "left wingers." LeMay, on his first visit to his home city since becoming former Alabama Gov. Wallace's vice pres- idential runningmate, said he used to think Nixon would "do what this country needs. "Then I saw his proposed cab- inet in which every left wing member of the Republican Party was listed" and "began to wonder what kind of deals Nixon made with the liberal wing," LeMay said. Retired Gen. Curtis LeMay, for- mer head of the Strategic Air Command and George Wallace's vice presidential running mate,! said yesterday friends make him privy to inside information at the Pentagon. LeMay said that's how he keeps' up with "the situation" in Viet- nam.; "I still have friends in th e1 Pentagon~who give me defense in-t formation," he told newsmen. He declined to elaborate, saying "I've only been in politics since 1 a s t1 Thursday and I'm not quite sure1 of my footing." At a news conference on hist first visit home after becoming a vice presidential candidate, Le- May said one reason he joined the Wallace ticket was that Repub-X lican candidate Richard M. Nix-t on plans to stack his cabinet witht "left wingers." Police battle students University students clashed with police in Lima, Peru, yesterday, as they attempted to march to the center of the city in protest of the overthrow of Peruvian President Fernando Belapnde Terry by a military coup last Thursday. MEET IN MOSCOW: CzeChs, Russians to discuss treaty. legalizing occupation PRAGUE (P) - Czechoslovakia. sent a government delegation to Moscow last night to negotiate a treaty legalizing the occupation of this country by some of the Soviet bloc troops now here, Czechoslovak informants reported. The delegations departure , there was no official confirmation - reportedly took place while First Secretary Alexander Dubcek and leaders of his Communist party worked on harsh measures demanded by Moscow for with- drawal of some troops. Prague had agreed to consider Strike averted in N.Y. schools; officials ousted NEW YORK -)- Rhody McCoy, administrator of the controversial Ocean Hill-Brownsville school district, was re- lieved of his post yesterday, as the Board of Education moved to avoid another citywide teachers strike. The Board reassigned McCoy to its central headquarters and also relieved seven of the eight principals in the Negro and Puerto Rican Ocean Hill district. Bernard Donovan, superintendent of schools was ordered to assume direct supervison of 'the Ocean Hill Schools. The AFL-CIO United Federation of Teachers had threat- ened a strike of the 1.1-mil- --r--___ WHAT? YOU'VE ONLY SEEN "THE GRADUATE" ONCE?? ii ACADEMY AWARD WINNER' BEST DIRECTOR-MIKE NICHOLS JOSEPH E. LEVINE "t~SENTS A MIKE NICHOLS-LAWRENCE TURMANimoucni < {} This is Benjamin. ag He's a little worried about his future. THE GRADUATE 1gO.,SYCU31.,,, ANMAVCS EMBASUY F ls MONDAY thru THURSDAY-7:00 & 9:00. 4 - ' _ TONIGHT & EVERY WEDNESDAY at A HOOT an evening of endless musical variety come do your thing and/or sing-a-long 1421 Hilt St. 8:30 P.M. THURSDAY / and sign a treaty that would cloak the occupation with legality in Moscow talks between Dubcek and Soviet leaders. The informants said the gov- ernment delegation has 15 mem- bers, headed by Deputy Premier Fantisek Hamouz. It reportedly includes Maj. Gen. Karel Rusov, 'army chief of staff, and various specialists. Czechoslovakia's defense min- ister, Gen. Martin Dzur, had an- nounced Saturday he is certain the majority of the Soviet, Polish, East German, Hungarian and Bulgarian occupation troops in- vaded Aug. 20 will be out by Oct. 28 if Soviet conditions are met. IThe conditions include the treaty thatdill be under discus- sion and numerous measures which Moscow regards as needed to strengthen the Communist sys- tem in Czechoslovakia. Czechoslovak informants have said the number of troops to re- main will be at least seven divi- sions, or about 100,000 men. But some reports said the number staying is still up for negotiation and the Russians may insist on more. AIRPORT LIMOUSINES for information call 971-3700 Tickets are available at Travel Bureaus or the Michigan Union 32'Trips Day Phone 434-0130 6Atuww.Or& CARPENTER ROAD The 21-member ,party Presidium gathered in the forenoon. It was still meeting in the evening. Presi- dent Ludvik Svoboda, an honorary Presidium member, was present for parts of the closed-door ses- sion. A communique was expected at the end of the meeting but this was not certain. A recess and con- tinued meetings today were pos- sible. The session was attempting to frame for presentation to the 160- member party Central Committee a plan for carrying out the diffi- cult tasks outlined in the com- munique issued at the Moscow talks with Soviet leaders last week by Dubcek and Premier Oldrich Cernik. These included "reinforcing" the government and party with more orthodox Communists, tighter controls over the press and radio, more outspoken support of the Soviet bloc, and anti Western for- eign policy. lion-pupil public school sys- tem today or tomorrow after McCoy banished 80 disputed white teachers from class- rooms in his Ocean Hill- B r o w n s v ill e decehtralized school district. The UFT, whose 55,000 mem- bers are predominantly white, had accused McCoy and the principals of "direct defiance of the city and the Board of Education." An off-again, on-again UFT strike previously closed most of the city's 900 public schools for 11 classroom days since the fall term began Sept. 9. The walkout came to an uneasy end Sept. 30. Donovan told a news conference McCoy was transferred out of the district because he had insisted on obeying the suspended local board rather than the Board of Educa- tion. And the superintendent said the seven principals also had in- dicated defiance of the 'Board of Education., Over the weekend the Board of Education had suspended the 19- member local governing board of Ocean Hill for its refusal to re-, turn the 800 ousted teachers to their regular class assignments., Last spring the board ousted a small group of white teachers, ac-. cusing them of trying to sabotage the decentralization experiment. A trial examiners cleared them, and the Board of Education ordered their reinstatement. Ocean H Ill-Brownsville was set up as a semiautonomous 'dis- trict, to test the theory of com- munity control of schools in ad- vance of a general decentralization of the entire system. Israeis propose settlement UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. 0)1- Israel advanced yesterday a nine- point plan for peace with the Arabs that stressed readiness to negotiate immediately the issue of permanent boundaries, but made clear its intention to retain the Old City of Jerusalem. In a policy speech to the 125- nation General Assembly Abba Eban, the Israeli foreign minister, proposed also an international confTerence _of Middle East cun- tries to set up a five-year plan for solution of the Palestine refugee problem. H said the conference could be called in advance of negotiations. Eban asked further for a non- aggression pact between Israel and the Arab states, the setting up of open frontiers and free navigaton in the Suez Canal and the Gulf of Aqaba. The Arab nations, with support of the Soviet Union, have been demanding that Israel 'give, up Arab territory won in the war of June 5-10, 1967, as the first prior- ity in arranging a permanent peace settlement. The United States has been putting its hopes for a settlement on the private negotiations being conducted by Gunnar Jarring of Sweden, the peace envoy of Secre- tary-General U Thant. Eban expressed Israel's willing-. nress "to seek agreement with each Arab state on secure and reog- nized boundaries within a frame- work of peace." He suggested that "a new effort be made in the coming weeks to cooperate with Ambassador Jar- ring in his task of promoting agreement on the establishment of peace." Smith meets withWilson on Rhodesia LONDON (/P)-Prime Minister Harold Wilson will meet Prime Minister Ian Smith of Rhodesia aboard a British warship moored at Gibraltar today for talks on the deadlocked Rhodesian inde- pendence problem. . Wilson is flying to Gibraltar today with Commonwealth Secre- tary George Thomson and At- torney General Sir Elwyn Jones. Wilson and Smith met aboard the British cruiser Tiger off Gi- braltar in December 1966 and reached what appeared to be a compromise settlement. Smith backed out of the agreement later, apparently under political press- ure from hard-line Conservatives in his government. The decision for Wilson to re- sume negotiations indicated the British government liad high hopes of success. "PROTEST-A LIBERAL VIEW" SPEAKING Robert W. Carr, Co-founder of the Washtenaw Democrats for McCarthy FRIDAY and SATURDAY BARRY O'NIEL and ROGER RENWICK returning by popular demand to sing traditional folk music from Britain, Ireland and Canada, accompanied by guitar, banjo, dulcimer and concertina. - -- - - - - - - - - - - - 19 states challenge GI tax, exemptions 1. .I PdRdmOUnT PICTUReS PRsenTs d DinO De [LUReTIIS PRODUCTIOn The'Pa per Lion' is about to get creamed! Stuart Millar presents Starring AIcr Ada Technicolor United Artists WASHINGTON Q)-Connecti- cut and 19 other states, including Michigan, appealed yesterday to the Supreme Court to overthrow a ruling that would exempt ser- vicemen from state sales taxes. Unless overturned, the land- mark decision by the U.S. Circuit Court in New York City last July "will thoroughly disrupt the entire system of taxation," .said Atty. Gen. Robert K. Killian of Con- necticut. The circuit court, acting on a case brought by a Navy lieutenant, held that servicemen, based in a state away from home are not re- quired to pay sales and use taxes of the- host state. This includes taxes *on cigarettes and gasoline. The 19 states backing Connec- ticut said in a separate brief that the ruling would cut seriously in- to 'the taxing powers of the states and the District of Columbia, im- pairing their revenues "to an in- calculable extent." The circuit court relied on the 1942 Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act, which gave nonresi- dent servicemen immunity from state income and personal prop- erty taxes. "As a result of the lower court decision," he said, "Connecticut,, along with most of the 44 other states relying on sales and use tax revenue; will face a loss of essen- tial revenue and a disproportion- ate disruption of the orderly ad- ministration of tax collection." i AND... The SPANISH SOCIETY presents a lecture by PROF. JOSE DURAND SHOWS AT 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:1i0-9:10 NO 2-6264 --Next- H ELGA on the 1967 Winner of the Nobel Prize of Literature: "Miguel Angel Asturias Entre El Mundo De Los Mayar y el Arte De Vanguardia OCTOBER 9,8:00 P.M. 3050 FRIEZE BUILDING - 11 "HAMLET" FINAL PERFORMANCES NOW THRU SUNDAY I I i i JOAN PHILIP A'MARCELARMEA HernminoC-.,-TO43fl3ZZL* DINO DE LAURENTIIS" beROG[R VADIM -'£A47MLA *w -t elld4 WJEM~Iy LVUTHER wjD'7GEEADKAI'" ~ K1~YD'7' [ Marianne ProuctionlsZ& "WE DESTROY THESE DRAFT RECORDS NOT ONLY BECAUSE THEY EXPLOIT OUR YOUNG MEN, BUT BECAUSE THOSE RECORDS REPRESENT MISPLACED POWER, CONCENTRATED IN THE RULING CLASS!" -From Joint Statement of Catonsville Nine Rally in Support of t gg Catonsville Nine NOON TODAY ON THE DIAG 7 f '.,r, UF By N ir ~Sean I i a III